Health in the New Scenarios for Climate Change Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- possible advances in legislation, the built environment, technology, surveillance and control strategies, diagnosis and treatment, etc., and their deployment;
- progress in reaching sustainable development goals;
- level of education of women and policies that promote reproductive rights; and
- other factors that could alter future burdens of climate-related diseases and the status of the public health and health care infrastructure and institutions with which climate change could interact.
2. New Scenario Process
- A preparatory phase designed to serve the needs of the earth system modeling community. Together with the IAM community, four Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) were chosen. The IAM community then determined the emissions that would produce each, taking into consideration emissions of greenhouse gases and short-lived species specified on a 0.5° latitude x 0.5° longitude grid, and including land use and land cover. The development of the four RCPs is documented in a special issue of Climatic Change [9]. The modelers made the smallest number of socioeconomic assumptions needed; the aim was not to provide the backstories on how emission pathways developed. Because the RCPs incorporate carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, they are described in terms of their radiative forcing in W/m2 in 2100 and their trajectory of change. The four RCPs are 2.6, 4.5, 6.0, and 8.5 W/m2, corresponding to carbon dioxide equivalent concentrations in 2100 of approximately 490 ppm, 650 ppm, 850 ppm, and 1,370 ppm, respectively. Note that RCP2.6 is a peak and decline pathway where radiative forcing peaks before 2100 and then declines (with negative emissions at the end of the century) to reach 2.6 W/m2 in 2100.
- A parallel phase involving the earth system modeling community and the wide range of research communities needed to develop socioeconomic scenarios. The new scenario development is in this phase. The RCPs are being used in simulations by earth system models as part of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP-5), producing projections of the magnitude and pattern of climate change over this century and, in some cases, to 2300 [10]. Projections from these experiments are assessed in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. The IAM and VIA communities are developing new descriptions of future socioeconomic conditions, the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs). The process and architecture being used are described in another special issue of Climatic Change [2,8,11,12].
- An integration phase where scenarios for use in climate science research and assessment will be developed; this phase is just underway. These scenarios will integrate the socioeconomic development pathways with the climate change projections and with assumptions about climate mitigation and adaptation policies [11].
3. Methods
3.1. Scenario Matrix Architecture
- Radiative forcing as described in the RCPs and resulting climate change;
- Socioeconomic development pathways; and
- Climate (mitigation and adaptation) policies.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Health Trends of Relevance to Scenarios
4.2. Health in the SSPs
5. Conclusions
- the extent to which climate change could affect the geographic range, seasonality, and incidence of climate-related health outcomes under different assumptions of future socioeconomic development;
- the extent to which adaptation and mitigation policies could avoid those health risks and increase the capacity of the health sector to prepare for, cope with, and recover from climate change, and what these policies will cost; and
- how the balance of adaptation and mitigation policies could alter health burdens over time.
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Ebi, K.L. Health in the New Scenarios for Climate Change Research. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11, 30-46. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110100030
Ebi KL. Health in the New Scenarios for Climate Change Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2014; 11(1):30-46. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110100030
Chicago/Turabian StyleEbi, Kristie L. 2014. "Health in the New Scenarios for Climate Change Research" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 11, no. 1: 30-46. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110100030
APA StyleEbi, K. L. (2014). Health in the New Scenarios for Climate Change Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 11(1), 30-46. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110100030